
A Google user
I'm currently a PhD candidate in reptile ecology. During the past nine years of under-graduate and post-graduate studies I've attended four courses in statistics and two in population theory. Marc Kery's "Introduction to WinBUGS for Ecologists" didn't just introduce me to WinBUGS in a ecologically-accessible way, it also succeeded in doing what my previous courses in statistics had failed to do - it successfully explained and demonstrated the power of linear modeling for an ecologist such as myself. Apart from the firm theoretical grounding that the book supplied me, the author's examples, including detailed R code, have made it possible for me to write, run and explain custom linear models using a program that I never knew existed just nine months ago.
In his introduction to the book, the author writes, "Owing to its gentle tutorial style, this book should be excellent to teach yourself. I hope that you can learn much about Bayesian analysis using WinBUGS and about linear statistical models and their generalizations by simply reading it. However, the most effective way to do this obviously is by sitting at a computer and working through all examples, as well as by solving the exercises." Having read all chapters and worked through many of the examples, I can confirm that the book has succeeded in my case. If you know a little bit of R, and nothing about WinBUGS, then I recommend this book.